If you're familiar with the Google app on iOS and Android, you're likely aware of just how useful -- and eerily omniscient -- its AI-driven recommendations can be. It organizes your interests in cards, anticipatorily serving up information about traffic delays, news topics you're following, upcoming appointments, and dozens of other timely tidbits. But it's certainly not perfect -- after a while, it tends to become cluttered with old, outdated, or irrelevant information. And that's why Google is reorganizing the app's cards from top to bottom in this new update.

The feature is only available to paid users – that is, Pro, Business, and Enterprise subscribers – but should provide mental peace of mind if you know you have to do work somewhere with low connectivity. It can also save you some data costs if you choose to download files for offline use later while you’re on Wi-Fi.

Google wants to understand the language of emoji. The tech giant today launched a fun feature that lets people tweet emojis at the brand's Twitter account. For each tweet people send, Google automatically sends back a tweet with a GIF and a link to local search results about the emoji.

Mobile users can add these stickers to their photos by adding photos to tweets and then tapping the smiling face button to access the stickers menu. From there, users can choose from four new stickers in The Walking Dead category, including a motorcycle and a sheriff’s badge.

Google announced the release of a new Trusted Contacts application on Android. The personal safety app allows users to share their locations with friends and family members even if they’re offline or are unable to get to their devices.

The weeks between Thanksgiving and Christmas can be an emotional roller coaster for a college student: first, you get to go home, feast, see your hometown friends; then you head back to school only to realize there are still finals and papers in the way before the extended Christmas break. The last thing on your mind is making sure your paper is formatted correctly before handing it to the professor and peacing out for the holidays.

The battle between Coca-Cola and Pepsi just found some common ground. Fans of both cola brands are quite different in terms of education and political leanings, but both are skewing older, according to new data from ecommerce and consumer analytics provider Connexity.

Reader Matteo Gamba shared the screenshot below with SocialTimes, in which the Poke-like Send a Wave feature was added to his Nearby Friends section, and a Facebook spokesperson confirmed to SocialTimes that Send a Wave is a new feature the social network is testing, adding:

Pornhub enjoyed a pretty successful Christmas advertising debut last year, with its SFW spot about the dirty old man—and his perfect present—getting millions of views on YouTube. So, the adult site is returning with an encore.

Swedish agency Åkestam Holst has spent the past year using Ikea to explore family dynamics in all shades—from relationship longevity to divorce, and most recently, a troubled passage between a father and daughter.

Whatsapp and Facebook are the most frequently used social platforms, according to new research from GlobalWebIndex. GWI has found 58% of WhatsApp users and 52% of Facebook users are on the platforms more than once a day, compared to just 34% of YouTube users and 31% of Instagram users.

Jason Citron, who previously founded and sold the early mobile social gaming network OpenFeint, returned to gaming startups with the launch of Discord in May 2015. This voice and text chat app for gamers — a challenger to incumbents like Skype and Teamspeak — has since grown to 25 million registered users, who are sending 100 million messages per day across its platform. Now, Discord is launching its next product: GameBridge, a set of tools that bring voice and text chat to the games themselves.